Yoshe Ann Taylor started 2013 living on a remote Queensland property with her two kids, dreaming of a career in the arts. By the end of the year she was facing 23 years in a Cambodian prison after being convicted for attempting drug trafficking.
The 44-year-old was one of three foreigners, including a 19-year-old French woman, Charlene Savarino, arrested by local authorities trying to smuggle 2.2kg of heroin out of Phnom Penh International Airport, following a tip off by the Australian Federal Police.
At the time the two women denied being part of an international drug ring, but both still sentenced to more than two decades behind bars.
They said the narcotic-filled back pack they were carrying belonged to their Nigerian companion, Precious Chneme Nwoko.
Three years later, with Taylor living a nightmarish existence away from her children in Phnom Penh’s Police Judicial prison it’s been revealed that not only did the AFP provide the intelligence that put her there, they may also have information proving her innocence.
Top Comments
I don't understand these women who get conned.
Why can't they just tell the guy to carry his own backpack, bag, briefcase or whatever?
Or at least push to find out what is in the backpack and why he can't carry it himself!
'Cry me a river'.
So if you were sentenced to 23 years in a Cambodian prison for something you may not have done, you'd be happy for the public's response to be a sarcastic 'cry me a river'? Do you think she 'deserved it' for gullibly falling for a scam? These criminals target vulnerable women desperate for love. Do you also sneer at elderly people who believe a relative is in trouble overseas and need money wired to them?
I think she deserved her jail sentence for transporting drugs. As an adult woman it was her responsibility for knowing the contents of any backpack she was carrying. She is hardly going to admit that she knew drugs were involved.